In my news analysis about the new Windows 8/RT core apps, I asserted: "It's a new Microsoft", explaining how the company has greatly picked up the pace of new product development -- something also seen in Windows Blue, which I expect to ship less than a year after the great 8. A day following my analysis, Frank Shaw, Microsoft corporate communications chief, said that "continuous development cycle is the new normal across Microsoft", which is consistent with reinvention as the "devices and services" company that CEO Steve Ballmer described last year.

The new SkyDrive for iOS version is one more part of a process every Microsoft customer should get used to. Expect more-frequent updates and stronger support for more platforms -- yes, Android and iOS. Mike Torres, Microsoft group product manager ticks through the improvements:

Support for iPhone 5 and iPad Mini

Updated app icons and user experience

Works better with your photos:

Download full resolution photos to your iPhone or iPad

Control the size of photos you upload and download

Photo metadata is retained when you upload to SkyDrive

Opening and saving files to SkyDrive works better with other apps on your iOS devices

Many other small changes, bug fixes and performance improvements

SkyDrive 3.0 requires iOS 5 or later and supports iPhone and iPad. Expect ongoing updates to truly be Microsoft's "new normal" -- and too long coming.